A vegan wool called “Woocoa” has taken home the PETA Prize for Animal-Free Wool at the 2018 Biodesign Challenge, an annual competition that challenges art and design students to “envision future applications of biotechnology.” The award ceremony took place this past weekend at New York City’s Museum of Modern Art.

Made from hemp and coconut fibers and then treated with enzymes extracted from oyster mushrooms, the animal-free wool was created by a group of design students hailing from the Universidad de los Andes Bogotá, Colombia.

“The kind minds behind Woocoa came up with an eco-friendly, biofabricated material that will satisfy consumers and keep sheep from being shorn bloody for cruelly obtained wool,” said PETA Director of Corporate Affairs Anne Brainard. “PETA’s Animal-Free Wool Prize gives compassionate aspiring designers the boost that they need to help change the world for the better.”

While animal-based fashion materials such as leather and fur are high profile for their mistreatment of animals, wool is often considered to be less cruel to the animals. However, a number of recent exposés have revealed that this is not the case. Sheep raised for the wool industry often experience multiple cases of abuse ranging from mutilation or being skinned alive in an effort to shear the animal as quickly as possible due to the by-the-volume pay rate given to employees. In addition to that, one fashion industry study revealed that wool is most unkind to the planet.

McCartney, uses wool in several designs, highlighted the need for innovative vegan wool at the start of the competition, stating that: “We want to use this fabric, we want to use these designs and we want to be able to push fashion forward.”

Others, such as vegan actors Joaquin Phoenix and Alicia Silverstone, are using their platform to take a stand against wool. Phoenix appeared in an anti-wool billboard during 2018’s New York Fashion Week and last October, Silverstone appeared nude in a Portland, Oregon billboard that stated: “I’d rather go nude than wear wool.”

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